mokendamint:

helpfulharrie:

Source: Coyotemange

See Also:
(click)

Ooo~ I love brushes <3

Also, will be handy for future projects I have in mind

tiffy11taffy:

demidojang:

troy-artlog:

How to Make Your Art Look Nice: Contrast by Trotroy

I suddenly had an urge to make a tutorial. Here’s the one I did for my dA. NOW FORMATTED FOR TUMBLR.

HUE

Troy’s a boss.

i can never stress enough the importance of contrast of values in an artwork. my teacher always emphasized it, and it’s really made a huge difference in my work :3

toxicnotebook:

I FINISHED IT! FINALLY! 
In addition to the basics of the basics and the drawing tools, I have added the Color section (ahahaha I thought was going to be short) and prepping linework that will be used in Photoshop. Wooo!
These images are HUGE, so they’re on dA only for now. Links below!
Basics of Basics Part 1: [link]Basics of Basics Part 2: [link]Pen, Pencil, Brush Part 1: [link]Pen, Pencil, Brush Part 2: [link]Color Part 1: [link]Color Part 2: [link]Color Part 3: [link]Prepping Linework for Photoshop: [link]Previous Tutorials-Basic Flat Coloring: [link]Tiled Lighting: [link]
If there are any misspellings, I apologize. I only did a cursory edit, as I really wanted to get them done.

toxicnotebook:

I FINISHED IT! FINALLY!

In addition to the basics of the basics and the drawing tools, I have added the Color section (ahahaha I thought was going to be short) and prepping linework that will be used in Photoshop. Wooo!

These images are HUGE, so they’re on dA only for now. Links below!

Basics of Basics Part 1: [link]
Basics of Basics Part 2: [link]
Pen, Pencil, Brush Part 1: [link]
Pen, Pencil, Brush Part 2: [link]
Color Part 1: [link]
Color Part 2: [link]
Color Part 3: [link]
Prepping Linework for Photoshop: [link]

Previous Tutorials-
Basic Flat Coloring: [link]
Tiled Lighting: [link]

If there are any misspellings, I apologize. I only did a cursory edit, as I really wanted to get them done.

eyecager:

characterdesign101:

clockwork-dingos:

How to paint gold tutorial by *ConceptCookie
And I found this very helpful just by looking at it. I was never good at coloring gold.

Gold is tough. This is awesome.


Gold is super hard and this is a great tutorial so adding my own tip to this. A trick to painting gold is throwing in some desaturated yellows to where they look almost greenish.

eyecager:

characterdesign101:

clockwork-dingos:

How to paint gold tutorial by *ConceptCookie

And I found this very helpful just by looking at it. I was never good at coloring gold.

Gold is tough. This is awesome.

Gold is super hard and this is a great tutorial so adding my own tip to this. A trick to painting gold is throwing in some desaturated yellows to where they look almost greenish.

silvermender:

ilikelookingatnakedmen:

artsyfartsyana:

queen-of-france:

artcapitol:

Ear Tutorial Resource by *ConceptCookie

oh my fuckign god

YES I NEED 

from the back, the ear looks like a diaphragm! (Ask your nanna.)

god bless

silvermender:

ilikelookingatnakedmen:

artsyfartsyana:

queen-of-france:

artcapitol:

Ear Tutorial Resource by *ConceptCookie

oh my fuckign god

YES I NEED 

from the back, the ear looks like a diaphragm! (Ask your nanna.)

god bless

e1n:

storyshots:

Drawing from films

Drawing from films is a ridiculously useful exercise. It’s not enough to watch films; it’s not enough to look at someone else’s drawings from films. If you want to be in story, there’s no excuse for not doing this.

The way this works: you draw tons of tiny little panels, tiny enough that you won’t be tempted to fuss about drawing details. You put on a movie - I recommend Raiders, E.T., or Jaws… but honestly if there’s some other movie you love enough to freeze frame the shit out of, do what works for you. It’s good to do this with a movie you already know by heart.

Hit play. Every time there’s a cut, you hit pause, draw the frame, and hit play til it cuts again. If there’s a pan or camera move, draw the first and last frames.

Note on movies: Spielberg is great for this because he’s both evocative and efficient. Michael Bay is good at what he does, but part of what he does is cut so often that you will be sorry you picked his movie to draw from. Haneke is magnificent at what he does, but cuts so little that you will wind up with three drawings of a chair. Peter Jackson… he’s great, but not efficient. If you love a Spielberg movie enough to spend a month with it, do yourself a favor and use Spielberg.

What to look for:

  • Foreground, middle ground, background: where is the character? What is the point of the shot? What is it showing? What’s being used as a framing device? How does that help tie this shot into the geography of the scene? Is the background flat, or a location that lends itself to depth?
  • Composition: How is the frame divided? What takes up most of the space? How are the angles and lines in the shot leading your eye?
  • Reusing setups, economy: Does the film keep coming back to the same shot? The way liveaction works, that means they set up the camera and filmed one long take from that angle. Sometimes this includes a camera move, recomposing one long take into what look like separate shots. If you pay attention, you can catch them.
  • Camera position, angle, height: Is the camera fixed at shoulder height? Eye height? Sitting on the floor? Angled up? Down? Is it shooting straight on towards a wall, or at an angle? Does it favor the floor or the ceiling?
  • Lenses: wide-angle lens or long lens? Basic rule of thumb: If the character is large in frame and you can still see plenty of their surroundings, the lens is wide and the character is very close to camera. If the character’s surroundings seem to dwarf them, the lens is long (zoomed in).
  • Lighting: Notice it, but don’t draw it. What in the scene is lit? How is this directing your eye? How many lights? Do they make sense in the scene, or do they just FEEL right?

This seems like a lot to keep in mind, and honestly, don’t worry about any of that. Draw 100 thumbnails at a time, pat yourself on the back, and you will start to notice these things as you go.


Don’t worry about the drawings, either. You can see from my drawings that these aren’t for show. They’re notes to yourself. They’re strictly for learning. 

Now get out there and do a set! Tweet me at @lawnrocket and I’ll give you extra backpats for actually following through on it. Just be aware - your friends will look at you super weird when you start going off about how that one shot in Raiders was a pickup - it HAD to be - because it doesn’t make sense except for to string these other two shots together…

Since I’ve had people asking me about storyboarding and how to learn it or what exercises to do. Emma Coats tells you all you need to know in this post.

eyecager:

Hell cook concept part 1 - Arthur Gimaldinov

“In two videos, I will show you my working process from sketch to final illustration. I hope you’ll enjoy it.”

Hell cook concept part 2 

deliciousboards:

Casually posts this at 3 am when no one is going to see it. 
but FOLDS hoyl shit folds folds are so awesome man you literally have no idea I like drawing folds som uch I’ll put them in places where they don’t even belong sometimes. Honestly this is far from definitive and is just my understanding of how folds works gleamed from hours upon hours staring at strangers pants on mass transit, so don’t take my word for it, do your own study! Look at your own jeans in the mirror! look at other peoples jeans! google jeans on the internets! Each different fit is going to come with it’s own folds, depending on factors like the cut of the leg and how much fabric there is and how heavy it is and man there are just so many variables and things to think about it’s awesome

deliciousboards:

Casually posts this at 3 am when no one is going to see it. 

but FOLDS hoyl shit folds folds are so awesome man you literally have no idea I like drawing folds som uch I’ll put them in places where they don’t even belong sometimes. Honestly this is far from definitive and is just my understanding of how folds works gleamed from hours upon hours staring at strangers pants on mass transit, so don’t take my word for it, do your own study! Look at your own jeans in the mirror! look at other peoples jeans! google jeans on the internets! Each different fit is going to come with it’s own folds, depending on factors like the cut of the leg and how much fabric there is and how heavy it is and man there are just so many variables and things to think about it’s awesome

wannabeanimator:

Digital Skin Painting Tips from Muddy Colors

Avoid simple gradients. You cannot obtain convincing skin if you only add black and white to a basic skin tone. It’s more complex than that.

   Of course, all skins are different but you can try this :

      - A little bit of olive green on the shadow.

      - A little bit of blue under the eyes (lower lids).

      - A little bit of red on the cheek bones.

Just work with low opacity (0 - 5%), on a separeted layer and with the soft round brush.

eyecager:

Colorizing + weathering a greyscale sketch in Photoshop with Scott Robertson

eyecager:

Photoshop Mech Rendering tutorial  by Scott Robertson

Ahhh I want to try this process sometime this looks really fun ♥

foervraengd:

some notes I did during today’s stream.

Altho kisses are still hard to draw haha

trees/bushes practice

curryuku:

image

image

image

Thanks to this helpful Tutorial on Pixiv doing trees and bushes has never been this fun and fast~

I apologize it’s in japanese but if you look hard enough i think you can get the jiff of it

missmurrka:

helpfulharrie:

Source: Tracy J Butler

have you ever just cried because you’re not tracy butler?

i do all the time